Prtesident Trump is Truly Dangerous!

This higher cost of capital drives whether institutions and individuals want to borrow. It also affects risk models and investment options.
Think about this more please in the context of your own company. It's not really rates that make that decision for you. It is business conditions. You'll borrow at higher rates so long as business conditions warrant it. Business condition, i.e., the economy, are limiting. And it is credit that determines the money supply. If the wholesale price of money rises it may or may not affect money supply, depending on whether there is any affect on credit. Small changes in the Funds Rate are extremely ineffective in affecting money supply.
 
Money supply is when the FED creates trillions of dollars... deposits them in members accounts or give it out to other banks and the members use it to buy in almost worthless debt or say purchase assets or politicians with it.... all over the world.

If you once again pretend that we have not taught this to you in the past...
We will know you are just a liar running propaganda.

So here is your thought exercise...

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...d-to-congress-gave-banks-13-billion-in-income


1. The FED lent out between 9 and 13 trillion dollars in a very short span of time.

2. The money did not come from the US govt... remember the kabuki about Congress Obama and McCain and the 700 billion dollar backstop. This was 13 trillion.

3. The fed did not posses more that a couple trillion dollars in assets or cash at the time this 9 to 13 trillion was lent out.

So? Where did this money come from?

I have showed you the video where bernanke said he created trillions with a key stroke for buying in the worthless bonds..

But, this was another 9 to 13 trillion.

Who authorized it?
Who created without the U.S. govts OK?

Answer...

Piezoe are you going to take the red pill or the blue pill?




I don't no exactly what you mean by money creation, but if your referring to money supply, that is largely dependent on credit demand. Something the Fed has very little control over except perhaps at one extreme of the wholesale cost of money. The Fed is the government, and the government can create as much money as it needs, but the supply of money in the economy is primarily driven by credit.
 
The FED lent out between 9 and 13 trillion dollars in a very short span of time.
:D On my keyboard "T" and "B' are far apart. You are obviously using a new keyboard where they are adjacent . Thus your typo. It's O.K. We all know what you meant.:D jem, you never cease to entertain. And for that I thank you.
 
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Remember before the Federal Reserve was created, the US government printed its own currency! Now, that the Federal Reserve was created, they charge US taxpayers interest for the amount of US dollars they print for us! A lot of fools also, believe the Federal Reserve is part of the US government. It is not! Actually, it is a private bank! Without the Federal Reserve, how much would be the US deficit? Definitely, far, far less! I am for abolishing it totally!
 
"You're uninformed. Again. This forum has a feature that, when you totally block them, all your posts disappear from the person you ignore, and you won't see their posts either. It's a complete block out. There is also a vanilla ignore option you can select that makes it so you cannot see their post, but the person you ignore can see yours. That is pointless, I agree."

unless your cousin hooks up a dookicky that gives not logged in and logged in together.

It's pointless to put anyone on ignore. Just skip over their posts rather selectively. The advantage of having someone else put you on ignore, however, is that you will still see their nutty posts and you can speak the truth about them. They won't see your posts. But everyone else will! Trading attracts a lot of folks well away from the mainstream of political thought. I liken it to the people you would meet at the dog track. That's not a place you would go if you wanted to expose yourself to the mainstream. (I have have nothing against gray hounds or folks who like them.)

There is also an above normal concentration of folks in these political forums who have bought into various conspiracy theories. Our own jem is a primary example. He posts now under the pseudonym "TJustice". There is a certain vocabulary that these folk like that immediately tips you off to their infatuation with Breitbart, Infowars, and You Tube conspiracy videos.

Trading is something with a very low barrier to entry. Thus there is a very wide rage of folks doing it. To be sure, there are some very smart, well educated folks here as well, and some of them are undoubtedly savvy and experienced traders and investors. In the end, we are all just one, big happy family, but some of us are just a bit insane.

i see a lot of men who past their prime are addicted to emotional relief making drama where there aint none. my young cousin found who several are. looking at their linkedin profiles and company website resumes they should be smarter than they act here. i think there are many who were brought up good and them that only stick to the truth if they fear the consequences. amoral like.
 
I suffocate in the knowledge that I am the prisoner of a horde of vicious apes, and I rack my brain over the perpetual riddle of how this same people which so jealously watched over its rights a few years ago can have sunk into this stupor, in which it not only allows itself to be dominated by the street-corner idlers of yesterday, but actually, height of shame, is incapable any longer of perceiving its shame for the shame that it is.

Friedrich Reck-Malleczewen's Diary of a Man in Despair

street-corner idlers
 
serveimage
 
It was T... as in Trillions... Seinfeld...
... and you know it....

that was obviously the wrong link I grabbed. .



https://www.forbes.com/sites/tracey...rillion-bailouts-under-reported/#a01f6d626b00

The audit of the Fed’s emergency lending programs was scarcely reported by mainstream media - albeit the results are undoubtedly newsworthy. It is the first audit of the Fed in United States history since its beginnings in 1913. The findings verify that over $16 trillion was allocated to corporations and banks internationally, purportedly for “financial assistance” during and after the 2008 fiscal crisis.


:D On my keyboard "T" and "B' are far apart. You are obviously using a new keyboard where they are adjacent . Thus your typo. It's O.K. We all know what you meant.:D jem, you never cease to entertain. And for that I thank you.
 
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